By 9:15 pm on the night of Stanley
Tookie Williams execution, I could no
longer allow myself to watch or listen
to the insipid and insidious debates over
Arnold Schwartzenager's decision to grant
clemency and stop the execution, or to
let Stanley Tookie Williams die. The
decision was predetermined twenty four
years before, when four brutal murders were
committed. Tookie Williams was the founder of Los Angeles's most notorious street gang. Could he have possibly been innocent of these murders, maybe;but what difference did it make to the
guilt or innocence of one of the most
feared men in the country? Would
Jesse James or Billy the Kid have been
acquitted for a murder they didn't commit,
with the jury fully aware of their notorious reputations? It is highly doubtful.
If we consider the worth of a man or woman's life
upon their conviction of a brutal crime, how are
their virtues weighed? Remove the weight of anger
and hatred and desire for revenge and consider only
clinical justice. Can a judge or jury be clinicly objective once they are made aware of all facts, and have listened to all arguments by the defense and prosecution? I do not know. But let us assume that
it can be done, and was done in the Tookie Williams
trial. The ultimate verdict was the death sentence.
He survived twenty four more years in prison, this
was clemency by the judicial system, granted to him dispite his later execution. Many convicted criminals have faced their executioners in far shorter
time.
I believe Tookie Williams may have purged
his soul before he was executed. He
refused his last meal and any spiritual
council in his last hours. He was prepared for the final decision and might have even welcomed it; as the final escape from his 24 year isolation on death row. Would clemency to life in prison have made any difference to him by then? He had done all he could do to try and redeem himself, try to show his rehabilitation; but to the actor now Governor, who created the film roles of Conan the Barbarian and The Terminator, the word rehabilitation isn't pronouncable, much less a comprehensable concept.
Could the families of the murder victims accept
that the rehabilitation and life long imprisonment of a cold blooded killer, was worth the lives of their murdered family members?
Stanley Tookie William's ultimate guilt or innocence will always remain a question for any who remember his case.
Innocence or guilt is often confused and
rationalized and the story of Tookie Williams will be forgotten within the
next six months. His memory will be
associated with the gang he co founded
and guilt will be associated with his final
reputation. As for the state of California
and it's prison system Stanley Tookie
Williams has become a statistic, dehumanized and deleted from the prison
population, no longer a burden to society. Those who mourn now for Tookie Williams do not mourn the man,
few of them ever knew. They mourn
the ideal that he represented to them. He
may have inspired some with his words
and attempted rehabilitation,but Death
is final for both Tookie Williams and his
victims. Who mourns for the victims?
If the spirits of the slain are satisfied a
universal justice has been served.
The biblical story of Christ on the Cross
states that in his final hour he blessed
the convicted criminal who was crucified
next to him. Though Christ had the power to save himself and the man next
to him , he did not. Perhaps God embraced the criminal as his soul passed
on. Perhaps Christ was with him and gave him hope and foreknowledge of the
after life. Perhaps as Tookie Williams
prepared himself for his death he calmly
accepted his fate as he accepted God.
We will never know, but we can believe
that all death is destined and so is life after death.
The argument over the Death Penalty
pro and con , I have discussed often on
my radio program. My co-host Leila
is a devout opponent to the death penalty where as I am ambivalent about
it's use. I can wholeheartedly support
the death penalty for hienous crimes,
in which the offender either truthfully
confesses to the crime or is found guilty
on all counts with unquestionable proof
and positive DNA results. The most
critical of all areas argued in this debate
is the credibility and availability of such
concrete evidence. My sole defense of
the death penalty is related to this area.
If all proof of the intent and commitment
of the diabolical crime is rightfully admitted by a competent defense, and seen and understood by an untampered and unprejudiced judge and jury, then a sentence of death by the jury's decision
should be carried out. In Stanley Tookie
Williams case none of this solid evidence
was admitted at his trial. No DNA, No
eye witnesses, nothing but circumstantial evidence and the testimony of an inmate informant. There
may have been more evidence that convicted Tookie Williams , however
I am citing all that has been released to
the public. Mr. Williams retained his
plea of innocence to the crimes up to
the moment of his death. Was justice
served in his case? I do not know. All
the evidence submitted in his defense
during subsequent appeals could not
overturn his original conviction or commute his sentence to life in prison.
Statements by the prosecution stated that this case was solid and Mr. Williams
guilt of the brutal murders of four innocent victims was proven beyond
doubt to judges and juries and reviewed
many times over 24 years, resulting in
the same out come. If I or anyone were
a juror or judge in this case we may have
been oblidged to vote the same way.
One extenuating circumstance that would
obviously cloud the Stanley Tookie Williams trial; would be his notorious reputation as the founder of a ruthless street gang. What was his vision and intent when he formed his gang? Were murderous and brutal methods encouraged and employed by the gang members; and was the mimicing of their
leaders and following their examples encouraged?
Was the gang formed for self defense against the
violence of other gangs; or was it founded
for the same reason most street gangs are founded
for, the promotion of criminal and violent behavior?
If Tookie Williams spent his years
on Death Row writing against gang
life and gang activity is considered by his supporters to be proof of his rehabilitation; then obviously is intitial intentions when he founded his gang,were based on less than noble ideals; that spawned the creation of a well entrenched violent
street gang. I believe the system worked properly in the case of Stanley Tookie Williams, weither justice was truly served and he was innocent, as he claimed to his death, will always remain a question. In this case the accused was convicted of four horrific murders; and he accepted his own execution stoically. He must have understood that his case, having been processed exhaustively through the U.S judicial system for 24 years, and he was still found guilty, his crimes far out weighed any further reason for tollerance toward him by the people of California. They could no longer support
or justify, any further reason for Stanley Tookie Williams existence. The truth of his guilt or innocence will remain a topic of debate. However to most of the American people this case will be forgotten. Tookie Williams has become a prison statistic, dehumanized to a deleted prison number and an empty, San Quentin Death Row cell; soon to be filled by another occupant.--------------------------------------------------L.A. STEEL